Muscat Daily

Indian regulator reassures investors after Adani rout

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Mumbai, India – India's securities regulator said Saturday that markets were stable and protected from further volatility, following a phenomenal share rout that hit the business empire of tycoon Gautam Adani.

The combined market cap of Adani Group's listed companies has collapsed by around Us$120bn – about half of the conglomera­te's value – since US short-seller Hindenburg Research released an explosive report in late January.

It accused Adani of accounting fraud and artificial­ly boosting its share prices, calling it a "brazen stock manipulati­on and accounting fraud scheme" and "the largest con in corporate history".

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) said in a statement that India's financial market had "demonstrat­ed ongoing stability and is continuing to function in a transparen­t, fair and efficient manner".

It added that it had "put in place a set of well defined, publicly available surveillan­ce measures" for addressing excessive volatility in specific stocks, without naming the Adani conglomera­te.

Adani dismissed the allegation­s in the Hindenburg report as a "maliciousl­y mischievou­s" reputation­al attack and issued a 413-page statement asserting its claims were "nothing but a lie".

Hindenburg said in response

Combined market cap of Adani Group's listed companies has collapsed by around $120bn – about half of the conglomera­te's value – since US short-seller Hindenburg Research released an explosive report in late January

Adani had failed to answer most of the questions raised in its report.

The group's founder has seen his fortune plummet sharply, dumping him from third to 17th on the real-time Forbes rich list.

His operations have expanded at breakneck speed, with Adani Enterprise­s shares soaring more than 1,0 00 percent over the past five years.

Finance Minister Nirmala

Sitharaman on Friday insisted Indian markets were well regulated and that the controvers­y would not affect investor confidence.

Earlier this week Adani can

celled a Us$2.5bn stock sale meant to help reduce debt levels - long a concern - restore confidence and broaden its shareholde­r base.

Big banks including Credit Suisse and Citigroup have stopped accepting Adani bonds as collateral for loans to private clients, according to Bloomberg News, fuelling worries about how the conglomera­te will raise fresh funds.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Art school teacher Sagar Kambli gives final touches to a painting of Gautam Adani highlighti­ng ongoing crisis of Adani Group in Mumbai on Friday
(AFP) Art school teacher Sagar Kambli gives final touches to a painting of Gautam Adani highlighti­ng ongoing crisis of Adani Group in Mumbai on Friday

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